WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.020 --> 00:00:04.080 [Music] 2 00:00:04.100 --> 00:00:08.090 Thanks to emissions powered by monster black holes, galaxies called 3 00:00:08.110 --> 00:00:12.130 blazars rank among the most luminous objects in the universe. 4 00:00:12.150 --> 00:00:16.190 They're also the most common sources of high-energy light seen by NASA's 5 00:00:16.210 --> 00:00:20.230 Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. 6 00:00:20.250 --> 00:00:24.300 Like all active galaxies, a blazar gets its energy from matter 7 00:00:24.320 --> 00:00:28.420 falling toward a central supermassive black hole. 8 00:00:28.440 --> 00:00:32.570 A small part of this material forms particle jets that travel outward in 9 00:00:32.590 --> 00:00:36.750 opposite directions at near the speed of light. What makes blazars so 10 00:00:36.770 --> 00:00:40.760 intense is that we happen to be looking almost directly down the jet. 11 00:00:40.780 --> 00:00:44.820 Now, Fermi team members have identified five 12 00:00:44.840 --> 00:00:48.880 of the most distant gamma-ray blazars known. 13 00:00:48.900 --> 00:00:52.940 The record holder emitted its light when the universe was just one-tenth its current age. 14 00:00:52.960 --> 00:00:57.040 That object hosts a black hole with a mass of about 15 00:00:57.060 --> 00:01:01.210 3 billion suns. That's 750 times bigger than 16 00:01:01.230 --> 00:01:05.390 the black hole at the heart of our own galaxy. Another of these distant 17 00:01:05.410 --> 00:01:09.440 blazars boasts a black hole more than twice this size. 18 00:01:09.460 --> 00:01:13.610 In fact, the observed properties of all five of these blazars 19 00:01:13.630 --> 00:01:17.790 show they're the most extreme known members of this extreme 20 00:01:17.810 --> 00:01:21.830 galaxy class. The discovery makes it clear that 21 00:01:21.850 --> 00:01:25.870 enormous black holes formed very early in cosmic history, 22 00:01:25.890 --> 00:01:29.930 but astronomers aren't sure how. In general it's thought that 23 00:01:29.950 --> 00:01:33.990 large galaxies--and their black holes--were built up over time through a 24 00:01:34.010 --> 00:01:38.070 series of mergers with other smaller galaxies. 25 00:01:38.090 --> 00:01:42.170 It is unknown exactly how mergers can build a 26 00:01:42.190 --> 00:01:46.280 billion-solar-mass black hole before the universe is much more than 27 00:01:46.300 --> 00:01:50.420 one billion years old. But after netting five of these extreme blazars, 28 00:01:50.440 --> 00:01:54.440 researchers hope to find more of them in Fermi data. 29 00:01:54.460 --> 00:01:58.510 These objects allow scientists to map out how the most powerful jets in the universe 30 00:01:58.530 --> 00:02:02.690 evolved over cosmic time scales. And scientists hope 31 00:02:02.710 --> 00:02:06.750 that additional examples will help them better understand 32 00:02:06.770 --> 00:02:10.810 how supermassive black holes developed so rapidly in the early universe. 33 00:02:10.830 --> 00:02:14.860 [Music] 34 00:02:14.880 --> 00:02:18.890 [Music][Beeping] 35 00:02:18.910 --> 00:02:22.960 [Beeping] 36 00:02:22.980 --> 00:02:30.297 [Beeping]